Literature DB >> 20192877

Trends in survival of patients diagnosed with cancers of the brain and nervous system, thyroid, eye, bone, and soft tissues in the Nordic countries 1964-2003 followed up until the end of 2006.

Freddie Bray1, Gerda Engholm, Timo Hakulinen, Mette Gislum, Laufey Tryggvadóttir, Hans H Storm, Asa Klint.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Diagnoses of cancer of the brain, thyroid, eye, bone, and soft tissues are categorised by heterogeneity in disease frequency, survival, aetiology and prospects for curative therapy. In this paper, temporal trends in patient survival in the Nordic countries are considered.
MATERIAL AND METHODS: Age-standardised incidence and mortality rates, 5-year relative survival, and excess mortality rates for varying follow-up periods are presented, as are age-specific 5-year relative survival by country, sex and 5-year diagnostic period.
RESULTS: Brain cancer incidence rates have been rising but mortality has been relatively stable, with 5-year survival uniformly increasing from the early-1970s, particularly in younger patients. Five-year survival from brain cancer among men varies between 45% and 50% for men and 60% to 70% in women, with excess deaths decreasing with time in each of the Nordic populations. Age-standardised incidence rates of thyroid cancer have been mainly increasing during the 1960s and 1970s, although trends thereafter diverge, with 5-year relative survival increasing 20-30 percentage points over the last 40 years to around 80-90%. Thyroid cancer survival is consistently lower in Denmark, particularly in patients diagnosed aged over 60, while there is less geographic variation in excess deaths three months beyond initial diagnosis. Relative survival from eye cancer increased with time from approximately 60% in 1964-1968 to 80% 1999-2003, while for bone sarcoma, incidence rates remained stable, mortality rates declined, and 5-year survival increased slightly to around 55-65%. Soft tissue sarcoma incidence and survival have been slowly increasing since the 1960s, with little variation in survival (around 65%) for the most recent period.
CONCLUSIONS: There have been some notable changes in survival that can be linked to epidemiological and clinical factors in different countries over time. Time-varying proportions of the major histological subtypes might however have affected the survival estimates for a number of the cancer forms reviewed here.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20192877     DOI: 10.3109/02841861003610200

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acta Oncol        ISSN: 0284-186X            Impact factor:   4.089


  6 in total

1.  Is the incidence of brain tumors really increasing? A population-based analysis from a cancer registry.

Authors:  Adele Caldarella; Emanuele Crocetti; Eugenio Paci
Journal:  J Neurooncol       Date:  2011-02-17       Impact factor: 4.130

2.  Cancers of the brain and CNS: global patterns and trends in incidence.

Authors:  Adalberto Miranda-Filho; Marion Piñeros; Isabelle Soerjomataram; Isabelle Deltour; Freddie Bray
Journal:  Neuro Oncol       Date:  2017-02-01       Impact factor: 12.300

3.  Improved prognosis in soft-tissue sarcoma of extremity and trunk wall.

Authors:  Mika M Sampo; Katariina Klintrup; Erkki J Tukiainen; Tom O Böhling; Carl P Blomqvist
Journal:  Acta Orthop       Date:  2016-06-20       Impact factor: 3.717

4.  Estimating and validating disability-adjusted life years at the global level: a methodological framework for cancer.

Authors:  Isabelle Soerjomataram; Joannie Lortet-Tieulent; Jacques Ferlay; David Forman; Colin Mathers; D Maxwell Parkin; Freddie Bray
Journal:  BMC Med Res Methodol       Date:  2012-08-17       Impact factor: 4.615

5.  Incidence, Mortality, and Survival Trends of Primary CNS Tumors in Cali, Colombia, From 1962 to 2019.

Authors:  Ivy Riano; Pablo Bravo; Luis Eduardo Bravo; Luz Stella Garcia; Paola Collazos; Edwin Carrascal
Journal:  JCO Glob Oncol       Date:  2020-11

Review 6.  Nordic Health Registry-Based Research: A Review of Health Care Systems and Key Registries.

Authors:  Kristina Laugesen; Jonas F Ludvigsson; Morten Schmidt; Mika Gissler; Unnur Anna Valdimarsdottir; Astrid Lunde; Henrik Toft Sørensen
Journal:  Clin Epidemiol       Date:  2021-07-19       Impact factor: 4.790

  6 in total

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